Hexagonal tools lib in rust.
Inspired by this
RedBlobGames
article and Sander Evers work
This lib allows you to:
- Manipulate hexagon coordinates
- Generate hexagonal maps with custom layouts and orientation
- Generate hexagon meshes (planes or columns)
I made the choice to use Axial Coordinates for performance and utility
reasons, but the [Hex
] type has conversion utilities with cubic,
doubled, hexmod and offset coordinates.
See the hexagonal coordinate systems
Run cargo add hexx
in your project or add the following line to your
Cargo.toml
:
hexx = "0.18"
hexx
supports serialization and deserialization of most types using serde,
through the serde
feature gate. To enable it add the following line to
your Cargo.toml
:
hexx = { version = "0.18", features = ["serde"] }
By default Hex
uses rust classic memory layout, if you want to use hexx
through the FFI or have Hex
be stored without any memory padding, the
packed
feature will make Hex
repr(C)
. To enable this behaviour add the
following line to your Cargo.toml
:
hexx = { version = "0.18", features = ["packed"] }
hexx
supports Bevy Reflection
through the bevy_reflect
feature. To enable it add the following line to
your Cargo.toml
:
hexx = { version = "0.18", features = ["bevy_reflect"] }
hexx
supports Face/Vertex/Edge grid handling
using Hex
as Face, GridVertex
as vertex and GridEdge
as edge. To
enable it add the following line to your Cargo.toml
:
hexx = { version = "0.18", features = ["grid"] }
hexx
provides the [Hex
] coordinates with:
- Distances
- Neighbors and directions
- Lines
- Ranges
- Rings
- Edges
- Wedges
- Spirals
- Rotation
- Symmetry
- Vector operations
- Conversions to other coordinate systems:
- Cubic coordinates
- Offset coordinates
- Doubled coordinates
- Hexmod coordinates
- Multiple hex resolution
use hexx::*;
// Declare points in hexagonal spaces
let point_a = hex(10, -5); // Equivalent of `Hex::new(10, -5)`
let point_b = hex(-8, 15);
// Find distance between them
let dist = point_a.unsigned_distance_to(point_b);
// Compute a line between points
let line: Vec<Hex> = point_a.line_to(point_b).collect();
// Compute a ring from `point_a` containing `point_b`
let ring: Vec<Hex> = point_a.ring(dist).collect();
// Rotate `point_b` around `point_a` by 2 times 60 degrees clockwise
let rotated = point_b.rotate_cw_around(point_a, 2);
// Find the direction between the two points
let dir_a = point_a.main_direction_to(point_b);
let dir_b = point_b.main_direction_to(point_a);
assert!(dir_a == -dir_b);
// Compute a wedge from `point_a` to `point_b`
let wedge = point_a.wedge_to(point_b);
// Get the average value of the wedge
let avg = wedge.average();
[HexLayout
] is the bridge between your world/screen/pixel coordinate
system and the hexagonal coordinates system.
use hexx::*;
// Define your layout
let layout = HexLayout {
hex_size: Vec2::new(1.0, 1.0),
orientation: HexOrientation::Flat,
..Default::default()
};
// Get the hex coordinate at the world position `world_pos`.
let world_pos = Vec2::new(53.52, 189.28);
let point = layout.world_pos_to_hex(world_pos);
// Get the world position of `point`
let point = hex(123, 45);
let world_pos = layout.hex_to_world_pos(point);
[HexBounds
] defines a bounding hexagon around a center coordinate.
It can be used for boundary and interesection checks but also for wrapping
coordinates.
Coordinate wrapping transform a point outside of the bounds to a point
inside. This allows for seamless or repeating wraparound
maps.
use hexx::*;
let center = hex(23, -45);
let radius = 5;
let bounds = HexBounds::new(center, radius);
let outside_coord = hex(12345, 98765);
assert!(!bounds.is_in_bounds(outside_coord));
let wrapped_coord = bounds.wrap(outside_coord);
assert!(bounds.is_in_bounds(wrapped_coord));
[Hex
] support multi-resolution coordinates.
In practice this means that you may convert a coordinate to a different
resolution:
- To a lower resolution, meaning retrieving a parent coordinate
- to a higher resolution, meaning retrieving the center child coordinate
Resolutions are abstract, the only useful information is the resolution radius.
For example, if you use a big grid, with a radius of a 100, you might want to split that grid evenly in larger hexagons containing a 10 radius of coordinates and maybe do operations locally inside of these chunks.
So instead of using a big range directly:
use hexx::*;
const MAP_RADIUS: u32 = 100;
// Our big grid with hundreds of hexagons
let big_grid = Hex::ZERO.range(MAP_RADIUS);
You may define a smaller grid you will then divide to a higher resolution
use hexx::*;
const CHUNK_RADIUS: u32 = 10;
const MAP_RADIUS: u32 = 20;
let chunks = Hex::ZERO.range(MAP_RADIUS);
for chunk in chunks {
// We can retrieve the center of that chunk by increasing the resolution
let center = chunk.to_higher_res(CHUNK_RADIUS);
// And retrieve the other coordinates in the chunk
let children = center.range(CHUNK_RADIUS);
// We can retrieve the chunk coordinates from any coordinate..
for coord in children {
// .. by reducing the resolution
assert_eq!(coord.to_lower_res(CHUNK_RADIUS), chunk);
}
}
An other usage could be to draw an infinite hex grid, with different resolutions displayed, dynamically changing according to user zoom level.
Usage in Bevy
If you want to generate 3D hexagonal mesh and use it in bevy you may do it this way:
use bevy::{
prelude::Mesh,
render::{
mesh::Indices, render_asset::RenderAssetUsages, render_resource::PrimitiveTopology,
},
};
use hexx::MeshInfo;
pub fn hexagonal_plane(mesh_info: MeshInfo) -> Mesh {
Mesh::new(
PrimitiveTopology::TriangleList,
// Means you won't edit the mesh afterwards, check bevy docs for more information
RenderAssetUsages::RENDER_WORLD,
)
.with_inserted_attribute(Mesh::ATTRIBUTE_POSITION, mesh_info.vertices)
.with_inserted_attribute(Mesh::ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, mesh_info.normals)
.with_inserted_attribute(Mesh::ATTRIBUTE_UV_0, mesh_info.uvs)
.with_inserted_indices(Indices::U16(mesh_info.indices))
}
The [MeshInfo
] can be produced from [PlaneMeshBuilder
] or
[ColumnMeshBuilder
]
See the examples for bevy usage
Why not derive
PartialOrd, Ord
onHex
?
Adding these traits to Hex
would mean to define an absolute rule on how to solve
this:
let a = hex(-10, 20);
let b = hex(1, 2);
a > b
Depending on how you consider this there are at least 3 possible rules:
a.y
is greater thanb.y
so it'strue
a.x
is lower thanb.x
so it'sfalse
a
's length is greater thanb
's so it'strue
What if I want to use it in a
BtreeMap
,BTreeSet
orBinaryHeap
?
Use a wrapper with the Ord
and PartialOrd
trait. You can copy and paste this
code snippet into your project:
/// [`Ordering`] wrapper around [`Hex`], comparing [`Hex::y`] then [`Hex::x`].
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct OrdByYX(pub Hex);
impl Ord for OrdByYX {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering {
self.0.y.cmp(&other.0.y).then(self.0.x.cmp(&other.0.x))
}
}
impl PartialOrd for OrdByYX {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> {
Some(self.cmp(other))
}
}
hexx
provides interactive examples showcasing various features:
cargo run --example hex_grid
This example showcases hex ranges, rings, wedges, rotation, and lines
cargo run --example hex_area
This example showcases how to generate hexagonal areas using grid utilities and gizmos and how to use two layouts on the same grid.
cargo run --example scroll_map
This example showcases the HexMap
struct for scrolling maps
cargo run --example wrap_map
This example showcases the HexMap
struct for looping/wrapping map
cargo run --example a_star
This example showcases the A star algorithm, with an interactive pathfinding between the origin and your cursor. Clicking on tile toggles their availability
cargo run --example field_of_view
This example showcases the FOV algorithm, with an interactive range fov around your cursor. Clicking on tile toggles their visibility.
cargo run --example field_of_movement
This example showcases the field of movement algorithm, interactively displaying the accessible range of movement around the cursor.
cargo run --example 3d_columns
This example showcases the 3d hexagon columns procedural generation
cargo run --example 3d_picking
This example showcases how to use the camera ray to detect hovered 3d columns
cargo run --example mesh_builder --features bevy_reflect
This example showcases the hexagon columns procedural generation customization options
cargo run --example chunks
This example showcases the hexagon resolution system, allowing to tile coordinates in evenly sized chunks
cargo run --example merged_columns --features bevy_reflect
This example showcases how to build a simple hex chunk system with each chunk being a single mesh
cargo run --example sprite_sheet
This example showcases how to use hexx with 2D sprite sheet.
cargo run --example shapes --features bevy_reflect
This example showcases how to use hexx shapes module